Tuesday, 13 January 1981

This is the concluding part of
the blog of my visit to Thailand with Dick Filby, Richard Grimmett, Frank Lambert
and Colin Winyard.

1
January.The new year started badly when we found our
car had been broken into during the night and various items, including my
camera and more irreplaceably Colin’s notebook had been stolen
(presumably mistaken for a wallet).We
had all been sleeping near the car but hadn’t heard a thing!We spent the morning in Krabi reporting the
theft and were not impressed to be told by the police how easy Toyota Corellas
were to break into.We spent the rest of
the day driving south to Kachong where a Short-tailed Babbler was seen before
dark.There were lots of local tourists
at Kachong but on producing our letter from Dr Boonsong we were given
accommodation and a guide!

2
January.All day at Kachong where there was a
distinctly Malaysian feel to the birds seen, many of which were towards the
northern limit of their range. There seemed ot be lots of birds about and I saw almost 50 species, although perhaps without any of exceptional
quality.I managed 2 Blyth’s Hawk
Eagles, 19 Silver-rumped Swifts, 3 Gold-whiskered Barbets, 6 new bulbuls
including Scaly-bellied and 3 Grey-bellied, Long-billed Spiderhunter and 2
Everett’s White-eyes.

3
January.A full day at Kachong going to the top of the
Waterfall Trail.This was my best day of
the trip as although I only saw 20 species they included male Red Jungle Fowl,
2 Maroon Woodpeckers, male Siberian Thrush (briefly on the forest floor when I
wandered up a ravine), a female Orange-headed Ground Thrush I described as
being ’cosmic’ (well it was the early 80s), male Chestnut-naped Forktail, 15
Streaked and 2 Eye-browed Wren-Babblers and 4 Spot-necked Babblers.We had been contemplating driving south into
Malaysia and the Cameroon Highlands but with 8 days of the
trip left it would have been a lot of extra miles to cover and we sensibly
abandoned the idea.My having seen
Siberian Thrush, albeit briefly, might have had something to do with my reduced
enthusiasm for such a dash!

4
January.Another full day at Kachong. We kept to the lower part of the park but it
was a bit flat after yesterday.My
highlights were a male Green Broadbill, Siberian Blue Robin and 60 Fairy
Bluebirds.

5
January.We spent an enjoyable morning at Kachong
seeing 2 Bushy-crested Hornbills, 6 species of barbet, female Green Broadbill,
an amazing Forest Wagtail, Eyebrowed Thrush and a female Chestnut-naped
Forktail.We then drove to Krabi seeing
14 Dollarbirds hunting in the rain before it got dark.Having the car broken into rather put us off
bus shelters and we found a hotel for 2 nights.

6
January.We spent most of the day in jungle 20km north
of Krabi.Birds seen included 4 Black
Bazas, Bat Hawk, 2 Black-thighed Falconets, Rufous Piculet, Banded Woodpecker
and 4 Eastern Crowned and 2 Pale-legged Leaf Warblers.We then spent the rest of the day finding a
beach nearby where we stayed until dusk seeing 2 Malaysian and 10 Kentish
Plovers.

7
January.We birded in the morning in the jungle north
of Krabi seeing yesterday’s 4 Black Bazas and 2 Black-thighed Falconets and
adding a superb male Scarlet-rumped Trogon, Buff-rumped and Black & Buff
Woodpeckers and 2 Sultan Tits.We then
drove to Phuket and finished the day on the town beach just before dusk where
we saw a selection of commoner waders.We camped at Naihan Beach, three nights in a hotel would have been
pushing the boat out too much!

8
January. All day at
Naihan Beach, watching 200+ frigatebirds and a White-bellied Sea Eagle from the
point in the morning and relaxing in the afternoon. We then drove north overnight, stopping about
30 km short of Ranong where we slept in a roadside stall.

9
January.Mainly a travel day, a look around where we’d
slept produced 6 Black Bazas and a Grey-eyed Buzzard but was generally poor so
we continued north to Khao Sam Roi Yord where we visited the marsh at dusk.Here there were lots of egrets and a male
Eastern Marsh Harrier.We stayed in the
same hotel in Pranburi.

10
January.We spent the morning at Khao Sam Roi Yord
where amongst 24 species of waders we saw the same 2 Great Knot as on our way
south on 30 December, but only one Nordman’s Greenshank.We then drove north to the saltpans south of
Samut Sakon for the afternoon.More
waders there included 120 Red-necked and 18 Long-toed Stints and 5 Broad-billed
Sandpipers.We returned to Bangkok where
we found a cheap hotel, and kept the windows closed although the buzzing of
just one mosquito was very annoying.

﻿

Dick, Richard, Frank, Colin and me. Photo taken by Dick, probably at Khao Sam Roi Yord and judging by the state of my trousers hopefully on our return visit. This was the 1980s and I was trying to go native in that shirt (unchanged from the previous photo0!

﻿

Frank, Colin, Richard, me and Dick. Colin checking that Dick got back in time for his camera's auto timer

11
January.We dropped the car off, had a final quick
look around Lumpini Park, where a White-crested Laughingthrush seemed most
likely to have been released, and caught a bus to Don Muang International
Airport.Our Bangladesh Biman Flight
landed in Rangoon at dusk where 8 Black Drongos were feeding around the airport
lights.We landed at Dacca to discover
our return flight had been delayed, claimed our bags and were taken to a hotel.

12
January.After breakfast, which fortunately did not
seem to include Purple Gallinule as two were captive in the hotel courtyard, we
were taken back to the airport and a succession of delays to our flight allowed
us time for some final birding.We saw
Lesser Golden-backed Woodpecker, Citrine Wagtail, Blue Rock Thrush, Bay-backed
Shrike (presumably the same as on the way out) and 25 Chestnut-tailed
Starlings.At some stage our Boeing 707
arrived and we boarded but from my window I could see one of the engine casings
was off and a local mechanic was working on it with what appeared to be a
screw-driver.After a while a white guy
in a uniform walked up and what appeared to be a big argument ensued.The white guy seemed to go off in a huff,
hardly reassuring for us passengers, and soon after the engine casing was put
back.We finally left at 23:00, more
than 24 hours late, again.As we sped
down the runway I could read the distance markers to the end of the run-way.We had just past 100m when we lifted
off.Teach me to ask for a window seat!

13
January.We stopped in Dubai at some time in the
middle of the night where I noticed the engine casing was again off.I was quite relieved to finally arrive back at
Heathrow at 09:00 and I was home for lunch.A very enjoyable trip, made more so by excellent companions Dick Filby,
Richard Grimmett, Frank Lambert and Colin Winyard. It cost me about £430 and I’d seen almost 450
species of which 80 were new.In hindsight
perhaps we would have been better off heading south first and leaving the north
of Thailand until later when more winter visitors might have arrived although
it probably would have made little difference.The way we did it left open the option of heading into Malaysia but that
had probably always been an ambition too far.